| Literature DB >> 35654033 |
Margherita Capriotti1, Tuhin Roy2, Nicholas R Hugenberg3, Hadiya Harrigan3, Hon-Chi Lee4, Wilkins Aquino3, Murthy Guddati2, James F Greenleaf5, Matthew W Urban5,6.
Abstract
Objective. Arterial dispersion ultrasound vibrometry (ADUV) relies on the use of guided waves in arterial geometries for shear wave elastography measurements. Both the generation of waves through the use of acoustic radiation force (ARF) and the techniques employed to infer the speed of the resulting wave motion affect the spectral content and accuracy of the measurement. In particular, the effects of the shape and location of the ARF beam in ADUV have not been widely studied. In this work, we investigated how such variations of the ARF beam affect the induced motion and the measurements in the dispersive modes that are excited.Approach.The study includes an experimental evaluation on an arterial phantom and anin vivovalidation of the observed trends, observing the two walls of the waveguide, simultaneously, when subjected to variations in the ARF beam extension (F/N) and focus location.Main results.Relying on the theory of guided waves in cylindrical shells, the shape of the beam controls the selection and nature of the induced modes, while the location affects the measured dispersion curves (i.e. variation of phase velocity with frequency or wavenumber, multiple modes) across the waveguide walls.Significance.This investigation is important to understand the spectral content variations in ADUV measurements and to maximize inversion accuracy by tuning the ARF beam settings in clinical applications.Entities:
Keywords: artery; dispersion; shear wave; ultrasound; waveguide
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35654033 PMCID: PMC9274453 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/ac75a7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Med Biol ISSN: 0031-9155 Impact factor: 4.174